The protocol also allows reserved bits in the V.120 header to be used to transport non-octet aligned frames and to provide a flow control mechanism.

In such a situation, the Header field contains the information about whether the data is split into multiple packets or not, so if it is located at the end of a packet, the decision can be made after observing the compressed size of the packet.

A Configuration Option may be negotiated to allow the use of the CS octet, or even to require its presence in every packet.

www.ietf.org /rfc/rfc1963.txt (4321 words)

The Development of the Orshansky Poverty Thresholds and Their Subsequent History as the Official U.S. Poverty Measure(Site not responding. Last check: )

By April 11, 1963, she had completed a 14-page memorandum to Ida C. Merriam called "The Children of the Poor - Some Suggestions for Research"; this memo contained much of the material that was included two months later in "Children of the Poor," as well as a number of proposals for research projects.

Since "Children of the Poor" was not published until July 1963, it could not have determined the choice of the $3,000 figure, despite its being referred to in the January 1964 CEA report chapter in connection with the $3,000 figure.

Nonfarm poverty thresholds for the base year 1963 were retained, and the new annual-adjustment and farm/nonfarm provisions were applied to them to yield revised poverty thresholds for both earlier and later years; revised poverty population data for 1959 and subsequent years were tabulated using the revised thresholds.

There is at least one edit: in verse 3, "pride can hurt you too, apologize to her" is obviously cut in from an edit piece or another take; and some listeners hear several other edits as well.

In mono [a], the instrumental track is mixed relatively quiet until the line "oh ho ho you treat me badly", when it comes up to a more normal level; in stereo [b] it starts at normal level and remains.

The only stereo mix documented in Lewisohn is of 10 Nov 1966, but a mix from 1963 is known from the tape compilation by John Barrett at EMI, with an intro spoken by Norman Smith who was not engineer on Beatles sessions in 1966.

It was bad enough that the big publishing houses had falsely convinced readers that if they bought multiple copies of a title they would get rich, but worse was how the quality of those comics had degenerated into a grotesque and violent parody of the imaginative stories and heroic characters that had inspired them.

The payoff was supposed to happen in the 80 page giant DOUBLE IMAGE Annual, in which the heroes of 1963 confronted the modern Image superheroes, but the book was never published.

Alan had finished the first third of the script when Jim Lee, who was signed to draw it, announced he was taking a year long sabbatical.

By 1963, about mid-way through America's involvement in the wars of Vietnam, the policymakers of the Kennedy administration felt trapped between the horns of a dilemma.

The Kennedy administration between 1961 and 1963 repeatedly increased the levels of its military aid to Saigon, funding growth in the Vietnamese armed forces.

The CIA, ordered to make an intelligence assessment in the spring of 1963, permitted their view to be swayed by the military and produced a national intelligence estimate that downplayed Diem's political weaknesses.

Minister and civil-rights activist Dr. Martin Luther King led over two hundred thousand people in the largest non-violent demonstration ever held to support the passage of civil rights legislation.

On June 19, 1963, Gates Brown hit a home run in his first Major League at-bat making him the first American League fl player to join this unique set of long ball hitters.

The forty-three year-old righthander (who began his Major League career in 1939) went five innings, struck out three batters, walked three, and gave up six hits in a 7-4 victory over the Kansas City Athletics.

This piece was written by Perry Greiner and is a direct quote from the original material.

And even as this is being written in early 1963, the President has stated that unless his tax-cut, tax-reform proposals are adopted in the form presented to Congress, a business recession is practically assured.

Whether the foregoing projection is correct or not must remain for the future to reveal.

The title of Tartts first novel also is a fair description of her own attitude toward press interviews.

She was born in 1963 in Greenwood, Mississippi, the elder of two daughters born to Don and Taylor Tartt, but she grew up in Grenada, Mississippi, on the eastern edge of the Delta.

Details from her formative years are scant, but she appears to have been a precocious child with an early love for literatureshe wrote her first poem at age five, published her first sonnet in a Mississippi literary review at thirteen.